T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
286.1 | No Black and Gold in the starting line up! | SHALOT::MEDVID | Head Like a Hole | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:27 | 21 |
| Just as I feared, no Pirates in the starting outfield even after every
sports announcer I heard call a Pittsburgh game this year stated
they have the best starting outfield. Finishing ahead of Bonilla,
VanSlyke and Bonds were the three starters, Tony Fatso Gwynn, and
Darryl Whiiiiiiiner Strawberry. Eric Davis finished ahead of Bonds
even after not playing for about 1/4 of the first half.
No other Pittsburgh players even finished in the top five in each
category. That says one of two things:
- fans are really stupid
- Pittsburgh has a team of very good team-players and no real
stars
I'd say it's the latter except that Mike LaValliere is one of the best
catchers in the NL and didn't even get enough votes to make the
listings.
Neal Heaton will probably start the All-Star game though because Viola
is scheduled to pitch Sunday, according to ESPN's Chris Berman.
|
286.2 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | LoseWeight:TheTraciLordsDiet... | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:36 | 33 |
| Dan'l,
Say what wyuou want about Daryl being a whiner, but he's put up
some damn nice numbers - 20 dingers, hovering around .300 - it's
not like he's not deserving of a berth - I have no qualms about
him not starting. The starters are all pretty damn deserving.
Gwynn is hitting .321 - so it's not like he's merely banking in
on past performance. Bonilla is hitting .273 - big deal. Van Slyke
is hurt now, so it's a moot point, but Bonds was just as derserving
as the other guys. Eric Davis getting more than Bonds is simply
a case of brain dead fans voting on name recognition. And going
by the SI article, ol' Barry isn't exactly endearing himself to
folks.
If you want to get made, look at the AL farce voting - perhaps they
need "Designated Voters", because the fans blew it big time. Cal
Ripkin over Guillen? McGwire? Boggs???????????? Steve Sax???
C'mon.
Dan'l - back to the NL outfield - lots of great choices - Dykstra
deserves it. Dawson has 18 dingers, 54 Ribbys and .322, Mitchell
has 19 dingers, 45 ribby's and .309 average. Granted that others
behind Kevin may be more deserving, but it's not a travesty. I
was pissed last year when Strawberry was voted in, cause he doesn't
deserve it - this year he's more deserving, and doesn't get voted
in. It's also tougher for Pittt with 3 good outfielders than most
teams that have only one. Non-hometown fans are less likely to
pick 3 Pirates to start in the outfield than Buc fans would....
In the NL, the only realy boner was Ozzie Smith over Larkin....
JD
|
286.3 | | COBRA::DINSMORE | hodson another so called savior | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:43 | 8 |
| strawberry is the straw that stirs the mets drinks.. if he stays
hot, theres no stopping the mets.. and no i am not a mets fan
/don, i KNOW youre thinking that..
dinz
|
286.4 | Looks like Dinz might be vaning again... | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:58 | 1 |
|
|
286.5 | | SHALOT::MEDVID | Head Like a Hole | Thu Jul 05 1990 12:13 | 21 |
| Dykstra deserved it.
Dawson's in on his rep. (He's one of my faves anyway.)
Mitchell's in because of a barehanded catch he made a year ago.
None of the Pirate outfield was anymore deserving than the others, but
I was just sure one of them would make it, especially Bonds and he
fihished behind the others. My reply was in response to my
disappointment, that's all.
My personal starting outfield would have been Dykstra, Bonds, and maybe
Strawberry who has been hitting well LATELY.
VanSlyke is not hurt...is he?
Yeah, I didn't even feel like expressing my disbelief about the AL
because I didn't want to write a 300-line note. Nuf said?
--dan'l
|
286.6 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | LoseWeight:TheTraciLordsDiet... | Thu Jul 05 1990 12:15 | 17 |
| Dan'l,
I might have gotten Van Slyke mixed up with Von hayes....Mitchell
made it cuz he was MVP last year - always good for name recognition.
I really feel that any of 6 NL outfielders could start, and there'd
be no problem.
The Bucs have the misfortune of having their players having good
years competing against players having better or equal years, but
with more name recognition. Like Lind - he's having a nice year
at second, but next to Sandberg, no one is close. Then you add
in Alomar and the rest...Same for Bell.
(I think Larkin should be the starter at SS with Bell the backup
and Ozzie at home watching....)
JD
|
286.7 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | GOOOOOOOOOAAAALL!!!! | Thu Jul 05 1990 12:24 | 14 |
| re .6:
I'd pick Dunston over Jay Bell at NL SS (and Larkin over the whole lot
of them).
re the first few replies:
It's R-i-p-k-E-n. Agree 100% that Guillen got screwed (and I'm an O's
fan). ^
py
|
286.8 | Go Ken Griffey, Jr!!! | 33328::BMCWILLIAMS | Improvise if you have to ... | Thu Jul 05 1990 13:18 | 0 |
286.9 | not quite | OAW::GORDNER | SEND TEQUILA AND BULLETS | Thu Jul 05 1990 15:05 | 15 |
| Re:.5
Mitchell is not in because he made a barehanded catch!!!!!!!
The man has been hurt the whole year. First, he played through the
wrist problem. Second, he now is suffering from a bad hamstring. People
don't realize what a good hitter Kevin is. His batting average seldom
drops below .300, and still he puts up very good power numbers. As an
outfielder he's not as bad as people think. He has a very good arm and
catches everything he SHOULD catch which is more than I can say about
Strawberry and Bonilla.
nuff said,
G.
|
286.10 | | REFINE::ASHE | LA, The Spanish word for the... | Thu Jul 05 1990 17:10 | 3 |
| Isn't Dawson batting around .320 with a bunch of HR's and RBI's?
Don't have the stats in front of me, but it seems like he earned
his place too.
|
286.11 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | LoseWeight:TheTraciLordsDiet... | Thu Jul 05 1990 18:07 | 11 |
| Walt, Off the top of my head, Dawson has about 18 dingers, 50+
ribbys, and is batting in the .310-.325 range. He is deserving.
Canseco has the worst batting average of the 6 starting outfielders
- he's hitting around .300.
Worst starting batting average is SURPRISE! Mark McGwire, who's
hitting a mighty .232 - yeah he has some dingers and ribby's, but
he's no all-star...
JD
|
286.12 | I'm out of order? your out of order! Your all... | BOOTND::JMILLER | | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:07 | 12 |
|
The greatest injustice in All Star voting this year and last year
begins and ends with the idiotic casual fans who continually vote Ozzie
Smith over the best young shortstop in major league baseball, Barry
Larkin. Doesn't anyone realize Ozzie Smith couldn't bat .300 to save
his life and he is maybe the third best fielding SS in the National
League.
Larkin was around .360 last year at the break, this year he is
around .330. He is the reason the Reds are where there at now. No one
is more deserving and yet has less of a chance of starting an All Star
game for the next 3-4 years, until Ozzie retires, than Larkin.
|
286.13 | All Star Rosters | CSCOA5::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:12 | 36 |
| Starters
--------
Mark McGwire, Oakland 1b Will Clark, San Fransisco 1b
Steve Sax, New York 2b Ryne Sandberg, Chicago 2b
Cal Ripken, Jr., Baltimore ss Ozzie Smith, St.Louis ss
Wade Boggs, Boston 3b Chris Sabo, Cincinnati 3b
Sandy Alomar, Jr., Cleveland c Mike Scioscia, Los Angeles c
Jose Canseco, Oakland of Andre Dawson, Chicago of
Rickey Henderson, Oakland of Kevin Mitchell, San Fransisco of
Ken Griffey, Jr., Seattle of Len Dykstra, Philadelphia of
Reserves
--------
Cecil Fielder, Detroit 1b Roberto Alomar, San Diego 2b
Julio Franco, Texas 2b Shawon Dunston, Chicago ss
Ozzie Guillen, Chicago ss Barry Larkin, Cincinnati ss
Alan Trammell, Detroit ss Tim Wallach, Montreal 3b
Kelly Gruber, Toronto 3b Matt Williams, San Fransisco 3b
Lance Parrish, California c Greg Olson, Atlanta c
George Bell, Toronto of Barry Bonds, Pittsburgh of
Ellis Burks, Boston of Bobby Bonilla, Pittsburgh of
Kirby Puckett, Minnesota of Tony Gwynn, San Diego of
Dave Parker, Milwaukee dh Darryl Strawberry, New York of
Pitchers
--------
Roger Clemens, Boston p Jack Armstrong, Cincinnati p
Dennis Eckersley, Oakland p Jeff Brantley, San Fransisco p
Chuck Finley, California p Rob Dibble, Cincinnati p
Randy Johnson, Seattle p John Franco, New York p
Doug Jones, Cleveland p Neal Heaton, Pittsburgh p
Gregg Olson, Baltimore p Dennis Martinez, Montreal p
Bret Saberhagen, Kansas City p Ramon Martinez, Los Angeles p
Dave Stieb, Toronto p Randy Myers, Cincinnati p
Bobby Thigpen, Chicago p Dave Smith, Houston p
Bob Welch, Oakland p Frank Viola, New York p
|
286.14 | Parrish over Fisk and Pe�a? | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:13 | 1 |
|
|
286.15 | | CSCOA5::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:28 | 18 |
| I think Parrish is a great choice; he's batting over .280 with
double digit homers, around 40 rbi's. I would have picked him
to start actually.
Who should be upset ? Here's some of my suggestions:
Glenn Davis, Houston 1b (I know he's injured)
Doug Drabek, Pittsburgh p
Ron Gant, Atlanta of
Willie McGee, St.Louis of
Don Slaught, Pittsburgh c
Mike Boddicker, Boston p
Ivan Calderone, Chicago of
Mike Heath, Detroit c-of
Edgar Martinez, Seattle 3b
Rafael Palmeiro, Texas 1b
Kevin Seitzer, Kansas City 3b
|
286.16 | | CSCOA5::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:30 | 67 |
| From: [email protected]
Subject: Baltimore's Olson, Atlanta's Olson make All-Star teams
NEW YORK (UPI) -- Baltimore reliever Gregg Olson and Atlanta catcher
Greg Olson were among 16 first-time All-Stars named to the American and
National League teams Thursday when the rosters were completed.
Olson of the Orioles, AL Rookie of the Year last season, was among
five AL first-timers selected Thursday for Tuesday night's All-Star Game
at Wrigley Field in Chicago. He is 4-3 with 15 saves and a 1.31 ERA.
Atlanta's Olson was his team's only All-Star and the only rookie
who will play in the game. He made the roster by hitting .295 with six
homers and 25 RBI.
The 28-player rosters were completed by NL Manager Roger Craig of
San Francisco, AL Manager Tony La Russa of Oakland and the league
presidents.
Shortstop Barry Larkin and pitchers Jack Armstrong, Randy Myers and
Rob Dibble were named to the NL team from West Division-leading
Cincinnati. Along with elected starting third baseman Chris Sabo, they
give the Reds an NL-high five All-Stars. The defending World Champion
Oakland Athletics have five AL All-Stars.
Starter Armstrong and relievers Myers and Dibble were among seven
first-time All-Stars named to the NL's 10-man pitching staff. The rest
of the NL pitchers are starters New York's Frank Viola, Pittsburgh's
Neal Heaton, Ramon Martinez of Los Angeles and Dennis Martinez of
Montreal and relievers John Franco of the Mets, Jeff Brantley of San
Francisco and Dave Smith of Houston.
Myers, Viola, Heaton and Franco are left-handers, and all the NL
pitchers except Franco, Viola and Smith are first-time All-Stars.
The NL reserves are outfielders Bobby Bonilla and Barry Bonds of
Pittsburgh, Darryl Strawberry of New York and Tony Gwynn of San Diego;
catchers Mike Scioscia of Los Angeles and Olson; San Diego second
baseman Roberto Alomar; shortstops Larkin and Shawon Dunston of Chicago;
and third basemen Tim Wallach of Montreal and San Francisco's Matt
Williams.
Either Olson or Scioscia will start because voted starter Benito
Santiago of the Padres is on the disabled list.
Of the NL reserves, Strawberry has the most All-Star experience. He
will be playing in his seventh game. Olson, Alomar, Williams and Bonds
are first-time All-Stars. Counting starting outfielder Len Dykstra of
Philadelphia, the NL will have 12 players making their All-Star debuts.
Starting pitcher Dave Stieb, outfielder George Bell and third
baseman Kelly Gruber were named to the AL team from Toronto. A's starter
Bob Welch and reliever Dennis Eckersley were also selected to the 10-man
AL staff.
Completing the AL staff were starters Roger Clemens of Boston,
Chuck Finley of California, Randy Johnson of Seattle and Kansas City's
Bret Saberhagen and relievers Olson, Doug Jones of Cleveland and Bobby
Thigpen of Chicago. Olson, Johnson and Thigpen are the only first-time
All-Stars on the staff, and Stieb was chosen for the seventh time.
The AL reserves are eight-time All-Star catcher Lance Parrish of
California; Detroit first baseman Cecil Fielder, who leads the majors
with 27 homers; Texas second baseman Julio Franco; shortstops Ozzie
Guillen of Chicago and Alan Trammell of Detroit; third baseman Gruber
and and outfielders Bell, Kirby Puckett of Minnesota, Ellis Burks of
Boston and Dave Parker of Milwaukee.
Fielder and Burks were the only first-time All-Stars added as AL
reserves.
The starting lineups, selected by fan voting, were announced
Wednesday. The AL starters are outfielders Jose Canseco and Rickey
Henderson of Oakland and Ken Griffey of Seattle, catcher Sandy Alomar of
Cleveland, Oakland first baseman Mark McGwire, second baseman Steve Sax
of New York, Baltimore shortstop Cal Ripken and Boston third baseman
Wade Boggs.
The NL starters were outfielders Dykstra, Kevin Mitchell of San
Francisco and Andre Dawson of Chicago, first baseman Will Clark of San
Francisco, Chicago second baseman Ryne Sandberg, St. Louis shortstop
Ozzie Smith, third baseman Sabo and catcher Santiago.
|
286.17 | Mrs Olson must be mighty proud... | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Fri Jul 06 1990 08:38 | 1 |
|
|
286.18 | All Star Game Trivia from UPI | CSCOA5::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Jul 06 1990 09:27 | 51 |
| CHICAGO (UPI) -- Here's a quiz to test your knowledge of All-Star
Game history:
1) The pitcher who holds the record for most bases on balls in
combined All-Star appearances? Think underwear.
Former Oriole Jim Palmer, seven.
2) The youngest player to participate in an All-Star Game?
Think medicine.
New York Mets pitcher Dwight ``Doc'' Gooden, who was 19 years, 7 months
and 24 days old at the 1984 classic.
3) How many players have hit grand slams in All-Star competition?
Only one. Fred Lynn in 1983.
4) Say, hey, what player holds the record for most games, most
total at-bats, most total runs, most total hits, most total triples and
most total stolen bases in All-Star competition?
Why, Willie Mays of course: 24 games, 75 at-bats, 20 runs, 23 hits, 3 triples
and 6 stolen bases.
5) Only one player has ever hit a pair of triples in an All-Star
Game. Who is he? Rod Carew in 1978.
6) In 1989, Bo Jackson became the fifth player in All-Star history
to hit a leadoff homer. The next batter also homered to mark the first
time in All-Star history the first two batters for one of the teams
homered? Who was that second batter? Boston's Wade Boggs.
7) Which manager won the most All-Star games? Walter Alston, seven.
8) Which league holds the record for most consecutive All-Star Game
losses? American League, 11, 1972-82.
9) What reliever holds the record for most games finished?
Think wildlife. Rich ``Goose'' Gossage, six.
10) What pitcher holds the record for most strikeouts in All-Star
competition? Double-D. Don Drysdale, 19.
11) Who was the last National League player to hit a home run in an
All-Star Game? The Braves' Dale Murphy, 1984.
12) Who holds the record for most games umpired?
If you know this one, get another hobby. Al Barlick, seven.
13) What was the shortest All-Star Game in terms of innings?
The 1952 classic at Shibe Park in Philadelphia, won 3-2 by the National
League in five innings because of rain.
14) What catcher played the most All-Star games because it ain't
over till it's over? Yogi Berra, 14.
15) What player struck out more than any other?
Mickey Mantle, 17 times in 16 games.
16) Who played the most fielding positions in All-Star competition?
Peter Edward Rose, second base, left field, right field, third base,
first base.
17) The last player to hit two home runs in a game?
Gary Carter, 1981.
18) What game featured no singles by the American League?
The 1968 All-Star Game, won by the National League 1-0.
19) Who is the only pitcher with three All-Star victories?
Lefty Gomez.
20) How many All-Star games has Wrigley Field played host to at
night? Be serious.
|
286.19 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | Hold a candle to *this* | Fri Jul 06 1990 10:29 | 7 |
| Saberhagen over Boddicker or Nolan Ryan????
Yeah, right.
Mark.
|
286.20 | Ryan or Boddicker will still end up going | POBOX::ALVES | Dolphin-Free Computing | Fri Jul 06 1990 10:37 | 8 |
|
Someone had to get picked from K.C., and there wasn't much to choose
from...
Welch hurt his hip yesterday, and he'll probably be replaced. It
will probably be Ryan or Boddicker. Ryan is the sentimental choice...
Brian
|
286.21 | | GOOBER::ROSS | South of the Border | Fri Jul 06 1990 11:02 | 7 |
| > Someone had to get picked from K.C., and there wasn't much to choose
> from...
How about Bo Jackson instead of Ellis Burks and Boddicker instead of
Saberhagen? I don't think there'd be as much complaining. Bo's been
on fire lately after a slow start and he's the player everybody would
want to see. How about a Bo versus Dibble matchup late in the game?
|
286.22 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | PenaltyKicks:==KissingyerSister | Fri Jul 06 1990 11:23 | 9 |
| to the list of players who should be upset add Schooler of the
Mariners,who has 21 saves in 24 opportunities,.,
Brantley doess not deserve a berth on the all-star team. What a
sh*t choice by Craig. Edgar Martinez and Kelly Grubeer would have
been my AL 3rd basemen, but Wade should thannk the blind fans, who
voted him in, securing his $100,000 bonus.....
JD
|
286.23 | | COBRA::DINSMORE | hodson another so called savior | Fri Jul 06 1990 11:24 | 2 |
| yea, good ole wade.. going for the stats boggs
|
286.24 | No bonus for Boggs and Clemens | CADSYS::CAVE | | Fri Jul 06 1990 12:58 | 14 |
| Boggs doe NOT get an All-star bonus (neither does Clemens). With there
large contracts the owners felt they should be All-stars and thus no
bonus. The agents agreed. Although I feel Boggs shouldn't have been
selected, he still is hitting .305 (after being around .270 for a while).
Boddicker deserved it as much as any pitcher (including Clemens).
Burks and Boggs make the team while Boddicker and Pena are the reason
the Sox are in first.
I agree with the noter whom suggested Bo and Boddicker instead of
Burks and Saberhagen (5-7, 2.98 ERA)
Alan
|
286.25 | Bo hasn't played all star ball...Burks has | LEZAH::RANDERSON | | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:13 | 4 |
| Burks has all-star numbers: 302 avg. 10 hrs. 20 2b 44 rbis and only 2
errors playing center field. What has Bo done? He's be hot for the
last ten days, but overall he hasn't had a good year, he's hitting
about 270 and he still butchers balls in the left field.
|
286.26 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | PenaltyKicks:==KissingyerSister | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:17 | 7 |
| Alan,
I read in a paper, that Boggs got $100,000 extra for getting voted
in - perhaps it has to do with leading 3rd basemen in voting. I
only reported what I read.
JD
|
286.27 | | GOOBER::ROSS | South of the Border | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:37 | 11 |
| > -< Bo hasn't played all star ball...Burks has >-
G AB R H TB D T HR RBI BB SO SB CS E
Ellis Burks 77 298 47 90 150 20 5 10 44 25 35 8 6 2
Bo Jackson 72 277 51 77 139 12 1 16 48 31 96 10 6 7
Bo seems to have Ellis beat in runs, hr, rbi, and steals.... it's a much
closer comparison than Saberhagen/Boddicker which is what I was referring
to... combine that with Bo's fan appeal and his ability to rise to the
occasion, and I'd easily rather see Bo than Ellis. I bet Burks doesn't
get more than 1 AB.
|
286.28 | Bo's got decent numbers, but... | LEZAH::RANDERSON | | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:53 | 4 |
| Burks probably won't even get one at bat -- he hurt his hamstring last
night. I'd rather see a young upcoming star get a shot - Burks is
playing some the best center field in the American league - than these
'name-brand', mister Nike, guys go for hitting 270.
|
286.29 | | CADSYS::CAVE | | Fri Jul 06 1990 14:24 | 11 |
| JD,
The Boston Globe today reported the Boggs and Clemens do NOT get
bonuses. Gorman had originally thought they did but after checking
the contracts realized that neither has an All-star bonus clause.
Of, course my source is the Boston Globe, so I could be wrong.
If Boddicker has an All-star bonus, Gorman should pay him anyhow.
Maybe that kind of gesture would help sway Boddicker to sign with
the Sox.
Alan
|
286.30 | | REFINE::ASHE | LA, The Spanish word for the... | Mon Jul 09 1990 11:22 | 2 |
| I would have taken Eisenreich and Boddicker instead of Burks and
Saberhagen...
|
286.31 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Mon Jul 09 1990 15:20 | 10 |
| Brook Jacoby has been named as Burks replacement for the All Star game.
Burks is sidelined with a strained hamstring. Meanwhile Palmiero and
Reed are still sitting at home. I don't understan the Alan Trammel
selection either.
That stiff Boggs has raised his BA to about .310. If not for a couple
of outstanding defensive plays by the Rangers this weekend, his average
and RBI's would have been up even more and so would the Sox lead. Wade
was a victim of poor exposure in previous All Star votes. Gruber will
get his chance. What goes around, comes around.
|
286.32 | olson is a bum | NWD002::JOLMAMA | M's & ChiSox in 1991 | Mon Jul 09 1990 15:27 | 6 |
| Another bum pick is Greg Olson, the reliver from the O's.
Mike Schooler is having a vastly superior year - Olson does not
belong, Schooler does.
Matt the Mariner
|
286.33 | vastly superior my ass! | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Tue Jul 10 1990 08:00 | 26 |
| re .32:
> Mike Schooler is having a vastly superior year - Olson does not
> belong, Schooler does.
What a crock. Here are the stats for Olson and Schooler through
Thursday's games, show me where Schooler is "vastly superior".
Schooler has an edge in saves because of more save opportunities, but
Olson has a better H/IP ratio and a decidedly better ERA -- certainly
not the stats of a "bum".
<<< ASABET::ASAB11:[NOTES$LIBRARY]BASEBALL.NOTE;2 >>>
-< BASEBALL >-
================================================================================
Note 128.95 The 1990 All Star Game 95 of 97
CERBUS::KARLSON "Only 169 shopping days until Xmas!" 7 lines 9-JUL-1990 16:18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here are Olson and Schooler's stats through Thursday's games.
W L G GS CG GF SH SV IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA
Gregg Olson 4 3 30 0 0 28 0 15 42.1 27 6 6 1 15 42 1.28
Mike Schooler 1 0 34 0 0 32 0 22 38.1 25 8 8 3 11 34 1.88
-rjk
|
286.34 | :^) | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I have a bird that whistles... | Tue Jul 10 1990 10:38 | 3 |
| Matt...how's the foot taste.
Mark.
|
286.36 | tastes good! | NWD002::JOLMAMA | M's & ChiSox in 1991 | Tue Jul 10 1990 11:06 | 13 |
| Regarding notes .33 & .34
Schooler has only one blown save opportunity- how many has Olson
blown? When the game is on the line, Schooler comes in and earns
the win. I do not have the stats for Olson, but, I understand he
has had a number of blown save opportunities.
Seems to me this is the real measure of a closer not ERAs, or any
other measure. I stand by my comment- Schooler belongs, Olson
does not.
Matt the Mariner whos foot is not in his opening
|
286.37 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Tue Jul 10 1990 11:54 | 12 |
| re .36:
> Schooler has only one blown save opportunity
Note .22 says 21 saves in 24 opportunities for Schooler, which is
correct?
I think Olson has three blown saves, don't have stats in from of me
though. I still feel that the "bum" comments in .32 are unjustified.
py
|
286.40 | All Star Game to determine home field for WS? | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:12 | 9 |
| A writer in today's Austin-American Statesman suggests that the home
field advantage for the World Series be decided by the All Star Game.
He writes that this would make the game mean something, would ensure
that all players and managers are out there to win, would eliminate fan
voting (what manager would want the fans picking his team), and would
prevent pitchers like Clemens and Viola from pitching a couple of days
before the game.
What do you think?
|
286.41 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:18 | 7 |
| Baseball is the sport where the home team advantage means the
least. The only time I believe it really mattered was in 1987 where
two teams exclusively tailored for their respective parks battled
it out. So if rather than alternating years they want the All Star
game to determine the home field advantage, it's fine with me.
/Don
|
286.42 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Tue Jul 10 1990 13:32 | 7 |
| Any predictions on tonight's game?
I'll say NL 9, AL 4. HRs by Scoscia and Williams (3-run shot) for the
NL, Gruber for the AL. Sandberg goes 3 for 3 and gets MVP.
py
|
286.43 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Tue Jul 10 1990 13:38 | 13 |
| Wind blowing out:
AL 14
NL 9
Canseco a 500 ft. homerun. Ripken MVP.
Wind blowing in:
AL 3
NL 1
Canseco a 400 ft. homerun. Henderson MVP.
/Don
|
286.44 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | Just the Fax, M'am | Tue Jul 10 1990 14:05 | 2 |
| If the wind is blowing out and Canseco catches hold of one, he could
hit it clear over Comisky Park (is that the right direction?)
|
286.45 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Tue Jul 10 1990 14:38 | 29 |
| Is Wrigley field big enough to hold Canseco's ego?
I caught him on 20/20 or whatever that show is a couple of weeks
back, and I'm sorry folks, I'm just not impressed with this guy....
The AL will be totally defensive. The NL will come close about
16 times, and all of a sudden the Ump will make a call which
enables the NL to score a run.
The NL will win 1-0, and after the game the AL will mob the
ump.
People will claim it was the most boring All-Star game in years,
and almost unanimously convert to Soccer. The move will sweep
the nation, people like Bruce will be thrown in prison, or
banished to the hinterlands, and in 4 years the world cup
will arrive.
The US team by that time will be a power to be reckoned with.
They will slide through a phenomenally exciting World Cup,
and win 2-1 in the Championship Game over Brazil.
People will party in the streets, and the President will declare
a week long national holiday....
(Hey, you wanted a prediction right!)
'Saw
|
286.46 | bum pick and Cal | NWD002::JOLMAMA | M's & ChiSox in 1991 | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:30 | 16 |
| regarding note .37
I stand corrected on Schoolers blown saves. But 21 saves out of
24 for opportunities (forgive the pun) is a good batting average.
Please forgive the 'bum' comment. If you read my original note,
I stated in the body that Olson is a "bum pick". That statement
should have been included in the title.
Predicitons- Cal leads the team to victory with a 3 run homer.
AL 4, NL 2.
Matt the Mariner
|
286.47 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Whatcha doin'? Oh, noting much. | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:46 | 7 |
|
The game will be boring as usual.
(I don't expect to eat crow over this one.)
Dickster
|
286.48 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:48 | 8 |
| No sweat Matt; personally I thought Schooler should have been on the
team too, though not at the expense of Olson.
Almost time for the people on this coast to go home and root for the AL
(despite my prediction a few back).
py
|
286.49 | Go NL!!! | ORACLE::DOLL | Calvin meets Bart, news at 11 | Tue Jul 10 1990 16:10 | 7 |
| Paul,
Why would people on this coast root for the AL? :-)
Mike.
|
286.50 | | ITASCA::SHAUGHNESSY | NY Yankees: MLB's socialists | Tue Jul 10 1990 16:40 | 6 |
| Hey, I been outta de country for some time.
Is it really true that the overrated pock-faced .230 hitting gilt-
by-association bum McGwire is *starting* at first base?!
MrT
|
286.51 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | PenaltyKicks:==KissingyerSister | Tue Jul 10 1990 17:09 | 13 |
| MrT,
YOu are correct. That's right Mr. McGwire got voted in by the fans
over such folks as Cecil Fielder. But don't worry, Tony LaRussa
is dropping ol' Mark down to the #5 spot after the break, saying
that Mark has to understand that they need more than some homers
and ribbys from the #4 spot - that they can't put up with him hitting
.230....
I'd rather see Carlos Quintana on the team than Mr. McGwire.
JD
|
286.52 | Holy Rain! | RAVEN1::B_ADAMS | I feel the need for SPEED! | Tue Jul 10 1990 19:51 | 7 |
| .42� Any predictions on tonight's game?
Rain....
What do I win? :*)
B.A.
|
286.53 | All-in-all, a major disappointment | GOOBER::ROSS | I bet I can make you sweat | Wed Jul 11 1990 07:47 | 11 |
| Memories of this year's game:
The new Bo Jackson-Nike commercial...
Bill Murray sings Happy Birthday
Walking Wade to get to Jose
Wade's 1.000 OBA
Julio's double off Dibble {then I went to bed}
|
286.54 | | SASE::SZABO | | Wed Jul 11 1990 07:57 | 8 |
| So, who won? How long was the rain delay?
I saw Bill Murray's "happy birthday" to Dawson. He's still got it.
But, at first, I thought he was singing to me- I didn't realize that
Andr� is a.k.a. Hawk. Oh, I see now, he doesn't put the ' over his
"a"....... :-)
H�wk
|
286.55 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Wed Jul 11 1990 07:59 | 8 |
| > So, who won? How long was the rain delay?
AL won 2-0 after a 1 hour and 8 minute rain delay. Julio Franco's two
run double provided the only runs. I ended up not watching any of it,
and apparently I missed little...
py
|
286.56 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 08:26 | 10 |
| I enjoyed watching ESPN's pregame thing with Bill Murray.
That man is hysterically funny, very talented, and one of my
favorites....
The game? No way. I've been reading "Watchers" by Dean Koontz and
decided that was far more interesting that watching the All-Bores...
later,
f�
|
286.57 | | XCUSME::KENDRICK | | Wed Jul 11 1990 08:30 | 4 |
| You're right, Paul. You missed little. The best part of the whole
game was when Craig had Boggs walked to get to Jose. Now if that
wasn't a "subtle" message.......
|
286.58 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Wed Jul 11 1990 08:47 | 13 |
| I don't believe it, but I watched (sorta - it was on in the background
while I did lotsa other stuff) the whole thing. If it had been
anyplace but Wrigley, I'd never of done it. For me, the highlights of
the evening were the 'color' pieces from around the stadium, and Harry
Carey leading the faithful in "Take Me Out to the Ball Game", and
getting a chance to see Ernie Banks one more time.......
But then, the best summer of my life was spent being an usher at Cubs
games.... I miss the *place*.
A&W
(and lights at Wrigley are the ultimate abomination)
|
286.59 | | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:16 | 7 |
| >The game? No way. I've been reading "Watchers" by Dean Koontz and
>decided that was far more interesting that watching the All-Bores...
Great book Saw!! I'd love to have an Einstein. They did
a movie of it, very disapointing.
mc
|
286.60 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:28 | 14 |
| � Great book Saw!! I'd love to have an Einstein. They did
�a movie of it, very disapointing.
Yeah, first time I've read Koontz, and he is good.
I like his names that he comes up with. That guy Streck... wasn't
their a mass-murderer named something like that? Richard Steck
or something?
Anyway, it beat seeing Jose "My Ego is Bigger Than Maradona's" Canseco
swagger into the batter's box....
'Saw
|
286.61 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:28 | 11 |
| Julio Franco was named MVP. Franco went 2 for 3 with 2 RBIs.
How about that shot of the AL dugout after the intentional walk to
Boggs with Franco, Clemens, et.al. all twitching like Jos�.
T, there's some stuff in here to feed some of your early Sports Theory
arguments. Looks like alot of people in here equate high offense with
excitement.
Even though the game was in an NL park, I noticed the DH was used by
both sides. I never saw a pitcher come to the plate once ;^).
|
286.62 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:38 | 13 |
| I only watched when Craig walked whomever to get at Mr. Enormous
Ego. I thought the shot of the dugout was hilarious, especially
with Franco and Guillen imitating Jose's twitch. That and when
Ramon throught the ball high and tight, and poor Jose got perturbed.
I really can't stomach that guy - he looked like "How dare you throw
inside or brush me back, I'm the great Jose Canseco, the highest
paid player in the game, you can't do that to me..."
I then turned it off, went out front, fired up the barby and watched
the sun slowly start to sink over the sound and the Olympics.
Infinitely more interesting than the all-star game...;-)
JD
|
286.63 | FWIW, I like Canseco. Big ego, yes. Not a loudmouth. | SASE::SZABO | | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:47 | 1 |
|
|
286.65 | | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Wed Jul 11 1990 10:21 | 2 |
| Richard Speck. Murdered a bunch of nurses. Had a tatoo on
his arm that said "Born to Raise Hell".
|
286.66 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 10:26 | 6 |
| Thanks guys...now it's coming back to me.
"Born to Raise Hell", eh?
'Saw
|
286.67 | Except his says "Clearly born to raise hell" | GOOBER::ROSS | I bet I can make you sweat | Wed Jul 11 1990 10:49 | 3 |
| >Had a tatoo on his arm that said "Born to Raise Hell".
Hey! Dan has one of those, too!
|
286.68 | ? of morbid curiousity | 6122::RICHARD | | Wed Jul 11 1990 10:56 | 10 |
| I know that this is going out of the base line, but since we're on the
subject of murderers: Has anyone heard about this Zodiac killer freak?
I vaguely heard something on the radio this morning that this guy has
said he will kill a person for each astrological sign, and he kills in
a cycle on every 21st day(today). Where the hell is this freak
knocking off people anyways.(I'm not the best at keeping up with the
news so I'm sorry if this is kind of well known).
Tom
|
286.69 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong,Thong | Wed Jul 11 1990 11:06 | 5 |
| Tom,
It's in New York City. He's knocked off 3 so far, I believe...
JD
|
286.70 | So what's Spleenbender's sign? | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Wed Jul 11 1990 11:11 | 1 |
|
|
286.71 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:14 | 15 |
| The best was the dude that I saw on the show Geraldo did with
Charles Manson.
This dude is in a home for the criminally insane in Pennsylvania,
(near Scranton/Wilkes-Barre area, cause I've been by the place).
Anyway, he was like totally doped up on whatever they give those
guys to keep them calm, and he's telling how God told him to
kill one million people... I guess he started with his family.
He said that if they ever let him out he'd kill again, so that
they'd better keep him locked up.
This guy made Son of Sam look like the Ice Cream Man.....
f�
|
286.72 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:27 | 13 |
| I watched thru the fifth inning
Zip / Zip
coupla hits
coupla walks
Mr T woulda loved it
nothing like a goodole pitcher's duel to get the old heart racing, hey?
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
I started reading `Red Storm Rising'.... pretty good, so far.
Mike JN
|
286.73 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:36 | 19 |
| Mike,
Little hint to make Red Storm more enjoyable.
Keep a list of the Russian Generals and what they're responsible for.
I didn't do that, and everytime they'd get to talkin' about one,
I'd have to scramble all over the book to jog my memory about
what the hell this one or that one did.
My brother tried that when he read it and it was easier....
Great book, I thought.
Also, you might want to try wearing your BDUs when you read the parts
about the land war, and switch to one of them submarine ball caps
when you read about the subs. Makes you feel really involved....
Hope this shlepping wonks you out,
'Saw
|
286.74 | | SASE::SZABO | | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:51 | 11 |
| On the subject of all-stars, murderers, weirdos, etc...... :-)
Anyone hear of this guy, Rev. Bud Green? While on vacation recently, I
caught bits of talk shows that had this idiot on. He claims that he's
been told by God to smoke marijuana and overthrow the government, so
he's on this wacked-out "pilgrimage" to "spread the Word". You gotta
see him. Boy, did Morton Downey and his sidekick on his new show,
Showdown, have a field day with this guy- I was rollin'! (HA ha, I
just realized my unintentional pun- rollin'!).
H�wk
|
286.75 | | NWD002::JOLMAMA | M's & ChiSox in 1991 | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:30 | 21 |
| While we are on the subject of all-starts, Rev. Bud, wierd interviews,
weirdos, et. al. . . . . consider this:
I enjoy professional wrestling not only for the action in the ring
but also, what happens outside the mat. The interviews are more
interesting than the matches. The brains behind wrestling have
enhance and fine tuned the sport where you have strong personalities
who entertain you between and during matches. In fact the wrestling
is secondary to the main entertainment provided by Brother Love; Bobby
the Brain; the Lovely Elizabeth; the manager of the Harts whos name
I forget. ESPN seems to have tried a similar approach with Dick
Vitale, a show outside the main show. But Vitale pales in comparison
to the Brain or even Brother Love. He's all mouth, no show.
To my point, major league baseball should promote a concept similar
to this in its broadcasts. Perhaps an upscaled Harry Cary or a
Brother Love of BB. The pace of baseball being what it is, this
seems to me to be a concept whos time has come. Into the 90s!
Matt the Mariner ;^)
|
286.76 | I hear the whistling of the shells already! Incoming! | SASE::SZABO | Internat'l Silver String Submarine Band | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:33 | 1 |
|
|
286.77 | Wrestling is real, the rest of the world is fake | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:35 | 10 |
| re .75 (Matt),
If you don't already have it in your notebook, check out the wrestling
conference at WWF::WRESTLING.
Comparing Vitale to "The Brain" is like comparing a Yugo to a Mercedes
(only 1/2 :-)).
py
|
286.78 | Canseco would make a great "bad guy" | AXIS::ROBICHAUD | GeorgeForeman-NextHEAVYweightChamp | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:52 | 1 |
|
|
286.79 | definitely, /Slasher. Hey, you'd make a good Brother Love! :-) | SASE::SZABO | Internat'l Silver String Submarine Band | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:55 | 1 |
|
|
286.80 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:26 | 19 |
| Geez, this discussion kinda give a whole new meaning to the
term "Murderers Row"
Wrasslin' is great entertainment. For me, I get a real kick out
of second guessing Vinnie, and who's gonna turn bad etc. Some of the
stuff is so blatant you can see it a mile away.
Predicting matches while they're on blows my friends minds. I'll be
watching a match, and say "well so and so looks down now, but he'll
win yet, he'll do this and this and this and then get the pin"....
There is some athletics involved, because coming off the top rope
you've got to be a least a little agile....
Anyway, what's the news on when Manson comes up for parole again?
'Saw (who finds these murderer guys more interesting that Jose CanHeBlow)
|
286.81 | JD,JoJ,Debildog,JimmyHart ;^) | GENRAL::WADE | Daddy,whyaretheangelsbowlingsoloud? | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:48 | 1 |
|
|
286.82 | I had better things to do | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Wed Jul 11 1990 16:13 | 4 |
| What was the final score anyway?
Thanks,
Mike
|
286.83 | AL wins 3rd Straight | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Wed Jul 11 1990 16:19 | 2 |
| It was 2-0, Mike. The National League set the record for least hits in
an All Star Game with 2.
|
286.84 | Boy, did that game finish late! | 4159::NAZZARO | Underneath the strobe light | Thu Jul 12 1990 15:50 | 4 |
| American League won on penalty kicks, I think. The managers had to
play goal, and Roger Craig couldn't stop Saberhagen or Eckersley. ;-)
NAZZ
|
286.85 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | Look For the, Bear necessities!! | Fri Jul 13 1990 08:48 | 20 |
| re books.
Red Storm Rising is good but the best Clancy book is "Cardinal of the
Kremlin". Dean Koontz is pretty good, after "Watchers", pick up "Mask".
re Wrass'lin
Real predictable, but would you rather figger out who shot JR or figger
out how Hulk Hogan is gonna get the Championchip back. A Soap is a
soap.
re Murderer, wierdo's and crap like dat.
I was always partial to Ted Bundy, Just when you think you're getting
to know someone.
re da game.
I was hoping that Martinez would come hard inside and saw Jose's bat
right outta his hands.
|
286.86 | | CAM::WAY | Candy crunch courtesy of McMahon | Fri Jul 13 1990 08:56 | 29 |
| � Red Storm Rising is good but the best Clancy book is "Cardinal of the
� Kremlin". Dean Koontz is pretty good, after "Watchers", pick up "Mask".
�
Actually, I like them all, but my least favorite was "Patriot Games".
� Real predictable, but would you rather figger out who shot JR or figger
� out how Hulk Hogan is gonna get the Championchip back. A Soap is a
� soap.
Amen.
� I was always partial to Ted Bundy, Just when you think you're getting
� to know someone.
I tend to like the sniper types. Like that ex-marine in the library
tower. Helluva shot, eh?
� I was hoping that Martinez would come hard inside and saw Jose's bat
� right outta his hands.
I saw a porno movie like that one time....(Okay, okay, treat me like
the pig that I am!)
'Saw
|
286.87 | Clancy | SHALOT::HUNT | Send lawyers, guns, and money ... | Fri Jul 13 1990 09:16 | 20 |
| This is interesting ...
�� Red Storm Rising is good but the best Clancy book is "Cardinal of the
�� Kremlin". Dean Koontz is pretty good, after "Watchers", pick up "Mask".
��
�
�Actually, I like them all, but my least favorite was "Patriot Games".
I've read all five of Clancy's books and I like "Patriot Games" the
best of all of them. My rankings are ...
1) Patriot Games
2) Hunt For Red October
3) Clear And Present Danger
4) Cardinal Of The Kremlin
5) Red Storm Rising
Go figure ...
Bob Hunt
|
286.88 | Presumed Innocent | RONALD::VENDER | | Fri Jul 13 1990 09:31 | 10 |
| Has anybody read PRESUMED INNOCENT; I'm in the middle of it right now
and it's pretty entertaining. If any of you have read it, that's a
pretty sick way to go(the rope apparatus around Carolyn's body, even if
she already was dead.) What did you think of the book?
I've read Patriot Games and Hunt for Red October, and I liked Patriot
Games the better of the two.
my 2$
Tom
|
286.89 | Coming to a theatre near you.... | CRBOSS::DERRY | You can eat it with a fork... | Fri Jul 13 1990 09:34 | 1 |
| Hey Ronald... I read it. Excellent book. Good ending.
|
286.90 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Whatcha doin'? Oh, noting much. | Fri Jul 13 1990 09:43 | 10 |
|
I have a hard time getting through "Patriot Games"...week after
week!
re: "treat me like the pig..."
Is this an original quote from Franklin "Dice" Chainsaw?
Dickster
|
286.91 | | GOMETS::297 | Mike McCarthy MRO4-2/C17 297-4531 | Fri Jul 13 1990 10:08 | 16 |
| Patriot Games - Gak...
Everytime Ryan referred to his wife as "Babe" I wanted to lose my lunch.
Clancy should stick to action and ignore the dialog.
My ratings:
1) Hunt For Red OCtober
2) Red Storm Rising
3) Cardinal of the Kremlin
4) Patriot Games
I haven't read Clear and Present Danger yet. I have to finish
Karnow's Vietnam book first.
Mike
|
286.92 | | CAM::WAY | Treat me like the pig that I am | Fri Jul 13 1990 10:31 | 20 |
| Re Treat me like the pig....
Yeah, sort of.
I hadn't particularly cared for the Diceman, but my date the other
night wanted to see Ford Fairlane. So we went.
I had a really good time. He was pretty funny, and that one line
"Treat me like the pig that I am" just blew me away.
BTW, I'd highly recommend the sound track from the movie. There
were a couple of pretty heavy references to Hendrix, and a lot of
the other tunes were good.
oh yeah, Al Bundy is in the movie, along with Gilbert Gottfried,
Wayne Newton, 2/3 of Motley Crue and Morris Day.
JMHO,
'Saw
|
286.93 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I have a bird that whistles... | Fri Jul 13 1990 10:48 | 14 |
| < Note 286.85 by CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ "Look For the, Bear necessities!!" >
> re books.
>
> Red Storm Rising is good but the best Clancy book is "Cardinal of the
> Kremlin". Dean Koontz is pretty good, after "Watchers", pick up "Mask".
Debil Dawg, I agree with 'Saw that they are all good save for Patriot
Game, which sipped big-time. Being a jar-head, I figgered that
you'd like _A Clear and Present Danger_ best cuz it features
conventional combat.
Mark.
|
286.94 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I have a bird that whistles... | Fri Jul 13 1990 10:50 | 6 |
| re.91:
Karnow's _Viet Nam_ is a very good book, but takes a long time to
get through.
Mark.
|
286.95 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | Look For the, Bear necessities!! | Fri Jul 13 1990 11:02 | 4 |
| re Lufay,
I will start reading "Clear and Present Danger" today after work and
before happy hour. Then I drink 'til Monday at 6:00am.
|
286.96 | | 22339::MCCARTHY | Mike McCarthy MRO4-2/C17 297-4531 | Fri Jul 13 1990 11:42 | 11 |
| Re .94
Mark,
Tell me about it. I've been reading it on and off for 6 months.
The first half is pretty slow, but once the American involvement
starts, the book moves along pretty well.
Bright Shining Lie is next, since I'm in a Vietnam mode.
Mike
|
286.97 | my list | 34905::SHAUGHNESSY | Devil,Satan,Beelzebub,Dan | Fri Jul 13 1990 12:26 | 34 |
| In case youse guys decide to stray from the pop-propaganda books
and broaden your horizons:
1. Foucault's Pendulum Umberto Eco
Former IU prof, wrote Name of the
Rose, regarded as Italy's leading
intellectual.
2. Vineland Thomas Pynchon
Best American novelist, whoever
he is.
3. On Bended Knee Mark Hertsgaard
Much praised well documented expose
on right-wing nature of American
media.
4. Rheinhart In Love Thomas Berger
Wrote Neighbors, Little Big Man,
Killing Time; quality Midwesterner
from OSU-ville (i.e., Columbus, Ohio)
5. Painted Lady Francoise Sagan
Brilliant teen gal French novelist
is grown up now, master of the
art of characterization
MrT
|
286.98 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I have a bird that whistles... | Fri Jul 13 1990 12:38 | 5 |
| T, you *really* should get out more. :^)
BTW, how's the CD collection coming along?
Mark.
|
286.99 | a message from the moderator | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:07 | 2 |
| There are other conferences for book and movie reviews, as well as CD
discussions.
|
286.100 | | CAM::WAY | Treat me like the pig that I am | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:29 | 12 |
| Picked up Foucalt's Pendulum the other day. Looking forward
to reading it, as it looks really good.
Looking really good is something the ALL-STAR game didn't do.
It was boring, long, over-hyped, boring, uneventful, full of
popular players some of whom weren't all-stars but all-pops.
That's probably why we digressed into something infinitely more
interesting....
JMHO,
'Saw
|
286.101 | | GOOBER::ROSS | I bet I can make you sweat | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:53 | 8 |
| Hey, MrT, Pynchon couldn't carry John Irving's jock...
World According to Garp
Hotel New Hampshire
Cider House Rules
A Prayer for Owen Meany
America's top fiction writer of the 80's.
|
286.102 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I have a bird that whistles... | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:55 | 5 |
| Stephen King would have something to say about that.
OBTW, the score of the All Star game was 2-0, AL.
Mark.
|
286.103 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | Look For the, Bear necessities!! | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:09 | 3 |
| Gee isn't Lufay on the ball today?
Whatta guy, keep up the work.
|
286.104 | lots of singles... small playing field... | GOOBER::ROSS | I bet I can make you sweat | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:10 | 3 |
| > Stephen King would have something to say about that.
Stephen King is the Wade Boggs of the literary set.
|
286.105 | | SHALOT::MEDVID | Head Like a Hole | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:31 | 5 |
| >oh yeah, Al Bundy is in the movie, along with Gilbert Gottfried,
>Wayne Newton, 2/3 of Motley Crue and Morris Day.
And Dice Clay too? An obvious attempt to put as many obnoxious people
in one movie as possible.
|
286.106 | Love Story. -Eric Segal Will make you cry mama...... | SASE::SZABO | Things are picking up! | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:32 | 1 |
|
|
286.107 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Kenny Rodgers is growing Breasts! | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:47 | 13 |
| The best living american writer is Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. The rest
are mere imposters. Read him, read Hunter S. Thompson. I like
Clancy's books - airline fodder. Can finish one off on a cross-country
trip. Amazing how many Clancy-like books there are. Finished off
Red Phoenix last flight. Many times I buy a book at the airport
(books like "Boomer", the "Warbirds", etc), finish 'em, and leave
them in the magazine pouch on the plane. Last flight there was
a book in the pouch, I picked it up. "Summer Heat" Straight Porno,
made me sweat.
;-) I left it for the next customer....
JD
|
286.108 | | CAM::WAY | Treat me like the pig that I am | Fri Jul 13 1990 15:00 | 19 |
| I think you have to examine writer's motives.
Vonnegut is GREAT. He does not write for pure entertainment value, though.
(His books are entertaining, but he's trying to "say" something).
I feel that author like Faulkner, Fitzgerald et al were trying to
convey some great message.
Authors like King, Clancy and others are just trying to entertain.
There is room for both types in our world, just as there is room
for the avant garde classical composer (message) and the contemporary
song writer (entertainment).
Both derive enjoyment out of what they do. We derive it also.
BTW, the NL set a record for fewest hits in an All-**** game.
'Saw
|
286.109 | | FSHQA1::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 292-2170 | Fri Jul 13 1990 20:15 | 4 |
| Tom Clancy's Clear and Present Danger is out in paperback. Just bought
it tonight.
John
|
286.110 | Much praised by who?! | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Sat Jul 14 1990 10:11 | 9 |
| > 3. On Bended Knee Mark Hertsgaard
>
> Much praised well documented expose
> on right-wing nature of American
> media.
"I can't feel you anymore, I can't even touch the books you've read"
- Bob Dyan, Idiot Wind
|
286.111 | Guillen an All Star? | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Mon Jul 16 1990 09:17 | 17 |
| Interesting article on Ozzie Guillen in this Sunday's local paper. It
was written by a baseball stats guy (who writes a weekly column and
often invokes the names of James, Elias, et.al.) who gave reasons why
Guillen should have been at home watching the All Star game. He claims
that everyone is looking at Guillen's high BA and the turn around of
the White Sox and ignoring everything else. Guillen is basically a
singles hitter on a team that doesn't score many runs. The White Sox
turnaround is due to the pitching, not Guillen's .300 BA, nor his
defense. In a year when offense is up, the White Sox are scoring less
runs than last year and have a lower ERA than last year (and are also
low in the league in both categories this year). Guillen's defense is
about the same as last year. The writer uses total bases to further
exemplify why Guillen is not an all star. Players like Fisk, Sierra,
and Boggs have total bases in the high 200's while Guillen has not
broken 200 yet. He doesn't walk much and rarely gets an extra base
hit. In fact, if you total his extra base hits and walks, he has as
many as Rich Gedman who is batting .187.
|
286.112 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | ink a dinka doo, a dinka doo | Mon Jul 16 1990 09:28 | 15 |
| And Mac, to me, it's that type of statistical evidence that is slowly
and surely killing my interest in baseball. (My opinion, of course.)
I always thought the beauty of baseball was you could argue over
who was better, DiMaggio or Williams, and never find the answer.
Now, dweebs (again, my opinion) like James try to fine-tune and
analyze the game so that you can't have arguements like that before
someone invokes one of the Statistical Satanic Verses like Elias
and James. And, when voting for the all-star team, Guillen was
leading the league in hitting (or was in the top 3, something like
that), and to me, I didnt' need to go running to one of Satanic
Verses to make up my mind. Same as voting for Dykstra. At the
time, they were all-stars, and thankfully NL voters, who don't need
artificial offensive stimulation to function, voted him in.
JD
|
286.113 | the good ole' days, we just new BA's | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Mon Jul 16 1990 09:33 | 9 |
|
Jd
Sounds like the world has figured out there is more to baseball
(offensivly) then batting average and home runs and now your upset becuase
people are looking at the facks and basing their opinions on the 'big
picture'. Not just BA and HR's.
mc
|
286.114 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Jul 16 1990 09:55 | 4 |
|
Lets compare Guillens OBP and Slugging Percentage to Ripken's.
How many walks does Guillen have?
|
286.115 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | ink a dinka doo, a dinka doo | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:01 | 11 |
| Mike,
i said it was my opinion. Folks who like to bury their noses in
the satanic verses of stat-mongers like James and Elias are certainly
able to do so to there heart's content. To me, it takes a lot of
the fun out of the game. It just transcends a lot about our society,
a society that can't function on imagination anymore.
Creativity is a dying art in America.
JD
|
286.116 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:14 | 23 |
| �
� Creativity is a dying art in America.
�
� JD
No it's not JD, not as long as I'm around...
I may not be a Hemingway, or even a great humorist like Dave Barry,
Gary Larsen, Bennet Cerf, Art Buchwald, Tom Lehrer et al., but just a long as
one person exists in the Universe can look at all they survey,
and put all the components back together in the most incongruous
manner imaginable, creativity will not die.
I may be a freakin' lunatic, but I find humor in almost everything I
see....
Hey, hey, my, my, Creativity will never die....
'Saw
|
286.117 | | 34905::SHAUGHNESSY | DevilSatanLuciferBeezelbubDan | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:24 | 29 |
| I think that these All-Star games are flawed to the extent they fail
to replicate real baseball. It's a game of constant relief pitchers,
except with better talent and stuff than normally seen in even All-Star
relievers - nobody gets a second look, no stuff to save, no arms to save,
in sum a_unnatural environment that allows the pitchers to dominate.
In one instance, a_useful role for the Designated Geek.
>Much praised by who?!
Wouldn't that be *whom*, O literary critic? And whoever in here used
the words "literary" and "Steven King" in the same sentence should be
apprehended by the Police and forced to turn in his library card
to local authorities immediately! And bad news for you too, JD, guess
which city and state Kurt V is from, and which college hoops team he
roots for.
Ross, you're right about Irving being a great one; I'd rate him thusly:
American Novelists: 1. Pynchon
2. Berger
3. Irving
4. Vonnegut
.
.
.
1,493. Jay McInerney
MrT
|
286.118 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | ink a dinka doo, a dinka doo | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:27 | 15 |
| Saw,
I didn't say it was dead, just dying, and it's the mood I'm in today,
anyway.
MrT:
I agree wif you on the all-star game. Perhaps it gives us a glimpse
of 'future-ball', the baseball of the future, where everyone will
be specialized to the point where pitchers only go an inning or
two. No true starters, just relievers. Will make the stat hounds
real happy.
And it should be called the some-star game, anyway.
JD
|
286.119 | | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:39 | 7 |
| > Creativity is a dying art in America.
>
I don't know Jd thats kind of stretching it. I mean all these
new stats were created. Had America not been creative they just would
have setteled for BA.
mc
|
286.120 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | ink a dinka doo, a dinka doo | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:46 | 5 |
| So I overreacted. I don't find \new' stats to be creative, however.
Just a way to de-humanize the game with scientific poppycock.
JD
|
286.121 | Don't have a liberry card, I own stock in Doubleday 8^) | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Mon Jul 16 1990 12:06 | 25 |
| I was the one who used literary and Steven King in the same sentence.
I don't feel like going back and pulling out my reply to see exactly
what I said, but my reasoning is somewhat like this:
King is a writer who writes for pure entertainment. Therefore, since
one person's entertainment is another person's garbage, there are
widely varying opinions as to his worth.
In the genre of horror, however, I would rate King at or near the top
of his field. He does it with style within his genre. He writes about
the current time period we live in, and people can identify with that.
Personally, I enjoy King and am entertained by his writing. But also,
I feel that I can say that in light of the fact that I also read classical
literature, I've plowed my way through Victor Hugo's endless sentences, with
their clauses upon clauses, I read Shakespeare, Twain, Melville. I've
started reading Faulkner, and plan on reading Joyce.
With an open minded, eclectic background like that, I figure I can get
away with some pure entertainment value for a while.
Oh yeah.... Agreed about the All-Unatural Game...
'Saw
|
286.122 | Now just a show | SHALOT::HUNT | Send lawyers, guns, and money ... | Mon Jul 16 1990 12:17 | 14 |
| The All-Star Game is now just an exhibition. Several of the old-time
National League stars have commented that their legendary "killer
instinct" just isn't there anymore.
Used to be that the NL dominated the All-Star Games and the reason they
gave was that they seemed to want to win it more than the AL did. Now,
the game itself is just the final media event in a two or three day
media circus of events.
Sounds like NL sour grapes to me but the "intensity" of the play has
definitely dropped in the last few years. The AL may have won the last
few games but they certainly haven't been dominating.
Bob Hunt
|
286.123 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Gimme a warm woman and a cold beer | Mon Jul 16 1990 12:49 | 19 |
|
'Saw, please don't attempt "Ulysses" or "Finnegan's Wake" without
a healthy heapin' helpin' of your home grown 'shrooms. Man, Joyce
was a spaced-out dude who perplexes many a literary scholor to this
day. Even the best can't comprehend his style and meaning without
the proper application of drugs, alcohol, or explosives.
Uhmmm...back to the topic: I *like* the all-star game being an
exhibition of our so-called living legends of baseball. So what
if some rookie is having a great April-May and is hitting a few
points higher, for my money I want to see the Willie Mays' and the
Johnny Bench's and the Mickey Mantle's, not some flash in the pan.
Pitchers, however, should be chosen on their *current* merit, given
their propensity for ups and downs. This year I would have made
one exception for Nolan Ryan.
Dickster
|
286.124 | | FSHQA1::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 292-2170 | Mon Jul 16 1990 13:04 | 56 |
| I've stopped getting upset about who gets voted to the All-Star game.
It's just like Halls of Fame and any other individual honor - it's
opinion, nothing more, and without any sort of objective criteria, it's
not worth getting upset about.
On the subject of stats, I have to agree with JD to a certain extent
but disagree to another extent. I think the more objective,
quantifiable means of evaluation there are, the better. If baseball
would come into the 20th century, they'd realize that there's a lot of
good to be gained from the use of the new stats. Understanding where a
team is strong or weak, which players are best in certain situations,
which players are better against other players or in different ball
parks, will help put a stronger team on the field. Basketball and
hockey are doing more with video tape all the time, football does more
with computer analysis of tendencies and trends all the time, so I
believe that baseball should modernize.
At the same time, we should always remember that these are human beings
playing the games, and the variation in human performances are what
makes them exciting. When I'm at a Patriots game, it's work. When I
watch a Patriots game on TV, it's work to a certain extent. For any
other sporting event, I can watch and enjoy without having to quote
chapter and verse from my Elias Baseball Analyst (if it happens to be a
baseball game).
Where I agree with JD is that the sabremetricians, rotisserie players
(and I don't mean to insult anybody here) and collectors have somehow
perverted the game to the extent where a player's value as a
collectible or as the member of a fantasy team becomes more important
than the player himself and the team he represents. For the figure
nuts, the numbers hung up by the player are more important than the
player himself. The increased awareness by the players of their own
performances is reducing the game more and more to a disconnected set
of individual performances where they play for themselves rather than
for the team. The increasing interest in baseball collectibles is
what's led to players being paid to appear and sign at card shows.
This will mean short term money for the players but long term loss in
interest by the fans.
Besides the fact that I don't have the time to play rotisserie well
(not to mention the fact that I can't bet sports to save my life so
what makes me think I can do any better at rotisserie) the above is the
reason I don't play. I don't collect for the same reason. I also try
not to go overboard with the analysis I put in here, but I like the
approach of let's get an objective answer first, rather than finding
data to support a pre-conceived conclusion. That's why Bill James
started doing what he does.
The increasing marketing tie-ins to baseball are what really ruins it
for me. As the game is used more and more as a vehicle for selling
things, it becomes forgotten that this is a game, first and foremost.
Naturally, it's a business, but when you see situations where the game
is incidental to promotion (ie, the minors) then there's a real
problem.
John
|
286.125 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | ink a dinka doo, a dinka doo | Mon Jul 16 1990 13:23 | 9 |
| John,
Thanks, you hit many of my feelings right on. I do play rotis
baseball,which I'm really bad out, cuz I don't follow stats closely
enough, and I don't like it that much becuse it's just numbers and
younever compete head to head, like you do in the hoop and football
rotis leagues I'm in.
JD
|
286.126 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Mon Jul 16 1990 13:54 | 10 |
| They will never be able to quantify the heart of a man, and
heart is the reason why men like Jim Abbott play baseball.
Yogi Berra was not the fleetest of foot, but he had spirit like
you wouldn't believe.
Give me a man who has spirit, and can make things happen, despite
statistics that might be contrary.
'Saw
|
286.127 | A rotis owner breaks up the pahtee | AKOV06::DCARR | Dee-ROY Brown leads parade in June! | Tue Jul 17 1990 11:09 | 8 |
| >Give me a man who has spirit, and can make things happen, despite
>statistics that might be contrary.
... and I'll show you a losing rotisserie team...
(Just to keep the conversation LIVELY :-)
ML
|
286.128 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Tue Jul 17 1990 11:51 | 26 |
| re: baseball stats
I see they now have (among others) stats on
AT BATS; AVG; RBI'S; HOME RUNS; RUNS; BASE ON BALLS
What the hell is the difference between home runs ... and runs..?
They're already tracking RBI's.
Finished Red Storm and liked it, haven't read Patriot Games, but liked
Clancy's other books. I also like SF. Just finished `Blood Music' by
Greg Bear ( I prefer SF by scientists... that is, the hard science type
books ). Stephen King's best book was `The Stand'. Nothing else he's
written even approaches it, and I've given up reading him. Foucault's
Pendulum isn't something I'd be willing to buy. `The Name Of The Rose'
which he wrote, was widely panned as an over-intellectualized piece of
excrement. He must have pissed the critics off somehow. They usually
rave about over-intellectualized pieces of excrement. I don't always
agree. Many heralded authors lose sight of the fact that, as `Saw
mentioned, their job is to entertain. I have the mental capacity to
follow almost any writer you could think of... that's my job. Telling a
story which is interesting is the job of the author; one at which they
oftentimes fail abysmally.
Mike JN
|
286.129 | | OOPS::MACGREGOR | | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:11 | 7 |
| RBI runs batted in
HR obvious
RUNS player touches home
Thus a HR automatically adds 1 RBI and 1 RUN.
The Wizard
|
286.130 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:16 | 16 |
| MikeJN...Stand was great, I liked "It" also.
Finished "Watchers"...what a great book. I loved the part where the
guy says to Travis "I'm your worst nightmare", and then Travis blows
him away.
I guess they track HRs as some measure of the guy's power.
You can't quantify baseball down to the nth degree, I don't think.
There aren't very many games that you could.
Perhaps, with the inherent physics of it, you could totally quantify
billiards, but I can't think of anything else that you could....
JMHO,
'Saw
|
286.131 | | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:01 | 7 |
| > over-intellectualized
That's it! That's the word that I've been looking for to describe the
atmosphere in ::SOAPBOX that I hate so much! 10 minutes in there, and
I'm dying to come back to good ol' ::SPORTS!
H�wk, plain and simple
|
286.132 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | She had one long pair of eyes | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:05 | 3 |
| Hawk, which word didn't you understand?
Mark.
|
286.133 | | TOPDWN::METZGER | Head Northwest young man.... | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:12 | 20 |
|
> Pendulum isn't something I'd be willing to buy. `The Name Of The Rose'
> which he wrote, was widely panned as an over-intellectualized piece of
> excrement. He must have pissed the critics off somehow. They usually
> rave about over-intellectualized pieces of excrement. I don't always
THe Name of the Rose was virtually impossible to read unless you had a decent
knowledge of Latin. Nothing bothers me more than trying to read a book that
changes languages in mid sentence.
Just one more quick literary note....If you like Robert Ludlum books do yourself
a favor and stay away from his latest Bourne Book (the Bourne ultimatum I think)
It is by far the poorest written book he has ever written and one of the poorest
best sellers I have read in ages.
got to get ahold of the Next CLive Cussler myself....
Metz
|
286.134 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:19 | 13 |
|
� THe Name of the Rose was virtually impossible to read unless you had a decent
�knowledge of Latin. Nothing bothers me more than trying to read a book that
�changes languages in mid sentence.
Actually, Metz, I enjoyed the book, but I know what you mean. It also
helped knowing about the typical life in a monastery during this period.
The mystery of the book was fun, though.
I didn't enjoy the movie, but liked Sean Connery.
'Saw
|
286.135 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | She had one long pair of eyes | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:19 | 14 |
| Metz, I gave up on Ludlum eons ago. It seems that once he achieved
fame for his earlier works (_Scarletti Inheritance_, _Gemini
Contenders_, _Holcroft Covenant_, etc), he simply took a template
and applied different character twists to make a story.
Hero's girlfriend gets off'd, hero travels the world using funds
from international banks to find perps, hero falls in love with
beautiful international spy, hero finds perps, hero kills perps,
hero retires at secluded hideaway with aforementioned beautiful
international spy. End of story.
BTW, is George Bell going on the DL and is Molitor coming off?
Mark.
|
286.136 | Last literary discourse from me...back to baseball | TOPDWN::METZGER | Head Northwest young man.... | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:24 | 14 |
|
I agree to some extent Mark,
I thought that the Bourne Identity was a very entertaining book simply because
he added the amnesia twist into his template plot.
As far as Tom Clancy goes...I think his latest Clear and Present danger was his
weakest effort so far. I think he threw in Jack Ryan into the book simply
because he's been in every book so far. It seemed like he had to contrive the
plot to include Ryan and it didn't work for me. The descriptions of modern
light infantry techniques were enjoyable however....
Metz
|
286.137 | Touch�, Markie! :-) Ouch! | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:25 | 1 |
|
|
286.138 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | She had one long pair of eyes | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:27 | 3 |
| Hawk, :^)
Mark.
|
286.139 | | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:29 | 3 |
| No :-) needed, Mark. Your name isn't REK!
H�wk
|
286.140 | Anti-intellectual ?????? | RONALD::VENDER | | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:25 | 17 |
| To some of the way earlier replies, what's in Vonnegut's writing that
you like about it.(serious ?-- not trying to sound like an Ahole or
be antagonistic). I read Cat's Cradle in high school and absolutely
despised it. I read Slaughterhouse Five a few summers ago, and enjoyed
some parts of it, but I got annoyed with his style pretty quickly. I
thought that he tried too hard to be symbolic and different in how he
tried to relate his messages to the reader. I guess I just didn't find
his books very good entertainment because they grated on my nerves.
Ludlum's Bourne Identity(I only read because I was bored out of my
skull) was pretty good, but he dragged it out too long(minute
descriptions and gibberish). Just my opinion, God knows that I'm no
literary critic.
I hate reading in general, and rarely read for enjoyment. One exception,
Presumed Innocent, is very good. I'm over 1/2way thru it.
Tom
|
286.141 | Ice 9 | 15436::LEFEBVRE | I Wanna Be Sedated | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:31 | 5 |
| _Cat's Cradle_ is one of my all time favorite novels.
BTW, when does Molitor come off the DL?
Mark.
|
286.142 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:39 | 15 |
| "Cat's Cradle" really caught my fancy. Ice Nine...too cool.
Couldn't tell ya why I like Vonnegut, I just do. I also LOVE to
read, and am a voracious reader.
(Anyone know why the Grateful Dead's publishing company is called Ice Nine?)
Finished "Watchers". Very, very cool book...
Another author to check out is Robert P. MacCammon, if you like Horror type
stuff. Read "Stinger".
Oh yeah, can anyone tell me, when Andrew Dice Clay is coming of the DL?
HTH,
'Saw
|
286.143 | Finally, someone who agrees with me on King ! | FRSBEE::BROOKS | Drexler,ZinaGarrison,DrM | Fri Jul 20 1990 16:08 | 15 |
|
> Stephen King's best book was `The Stand'. Nothing else he's
> written even approaches it,
I agree 10,000 % !!!!!! That book rocked the hell out of me. And
that was the edited version. The unabridged version is really
something.
And while I like to see a movie made based on The Stand, if it's
anything like some of the other stinkers done - forget it. I'd rather
reread the book.
Dr M.
|
286.144 | | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Sat Jul 21 1990 15:50 | 6 |
|
Dr M., how much longer is the unabridged version? The Stand was always my
favorite King book. Followed by the Dark Towers books, I can't wait for
the third.
mc
|
286.145 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Married to farsightedfanaticofpanic | Sun Jul 22 1990 17:24 | 6 |
|
Sounds like I'll have to checkout this Stand book, but for now my favorite
is Misery. Believable terror not the super natural stuff that he usually
writes....
mike
|
286.146 | | WMOIS::RIEU_D | Read his Lips...Know New Taxes!! | Mon Jul 23 1990 06:58 | 4 |
| Well, Dock, at least we agree on something, eh? The Stand was the
first King book I read, I've been hooked since. You're also right about
the movies made from his books.
Denny
|
286.147 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:21 | 24 |
| The only King movie that I liked was "Stand By Me". I felt it
captured the feelings of the four kids really well. (Youth is a
major recurring theme in King's stuff).
Anyway, one reason his movies never work well is a reason that King
himself gave in Danse Macabre, his non-fiction work on Horror.
Imagine yourself walking this dark lonely hallway to this big
door. Behind the door is an incredible monster waiting to
get you.
As you turn the knob and open the door, you see the monster.
Now, in a book, the monster is inside your own head, and is created
out of your deepest, darkest, subconscious fears (with a little prodding
from the author). No one can scare you more than yourself.
In a movie, you see the monster. Personally, it never scares me more
than what I can dream up....
The Stand is truly epic.
'Saw
|
286.148 | Another vote for 'The Stand' | MCIS1::DHAMEL | A splinter in the bannister of life | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:26 | 2 |
|
|
286.149 | | SHALOT::MEDVID | muscle and hate | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:30 | 10 |
| re: the monster in your head
But have you ever, ever, ever, ever, ever seen a movie that was better
than the original book? There are some movies that are great and you
say, "boy, that was as good as the book." But I've never walked out of
a theater and said, "that was better than the book."
Your mind is the best movie screen there is.
--dan'l
|
286.150 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Is Noting Sacred? | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:44 | 5 |
|
DeMilles' "The Ten Commandments" was better than the book, IMO.
Dickster
|
286.151 | Discussion moved by moderator | VAXWRK::NEEDLE | Money talks. Mine says "Good-Bye!" | Mon Jul 23 1990 08:10 | 4 |
| Press KP7 to add KAYGEE::BOOKS to your notebook. I think you'll find this
discussion more relevant to that file than the All-Star discussion.
j.
|
286.152 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | Drexler,ZinaGarrison,DrM | Mon Jul 23 1990 08:54 | 25 |
| re .144
Mike, the unabridged version at least doubles the length of the
book. We're talking some 100,000 words at least. From what I remember
(I was reading the book at a storem, next thing I knew, 1.5 hours
had passed), the publisher wanted to get the book out by a certain
time, so King had to lop off large parts of the book. It's really
amazing that he was able to do this, and yet still keep the essense
of the book. BTW, this version has a new ending.
re Last few (on characterization),
King pretty much said the same thing in his forward in The Stand
(updated) - that we all have probably casted every character in
our minds, and perhaps it's better that way. But he does expect
a movie to be made based on the book.
(Question : Who would you cast and Randall Flagg ? The best I can
do is a cross between Jack Nicholsen, the guy who played "The Hitcher",
and maybe Steven Segal.)
The best match that I've ever seen for a King movie was Christopher
Walken in "The Dead Zone", FWIW.
DrM
|
286.153 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Mon Jul 23 1990 09:11 | 9 |
| Maybe when we head off on a tangent like this, we oughta put in a
pointer and start a new note, ie. BOOKS AND STUFF THAT SPORTS NOTERS
LIKE OR HATE, ETC....
It probably is a bummer if you were interested in the All-Star Game
(Although I can't imagine anybody who IS) and kept looking through for
info and finding nothing but a discussion on books.
whaddayathinkanywayhuh?
Mike JN
|
286.154 | | SHIRE::FINEUC1 | | Mon Jul 23 1990 09:31 | 19 |
| Mike JN,
In a normal conference it would be a dandy idea to start up new topics when
minds go on tangents.
However, this logic does not apply to OURGNG::SPORTS - indeed, I can't stand
sports - I read this conference to find out about all the OTHER stuff happening
in the world - Dylan Thomas, Stephen King, beer commercials - you know, the
stuff that really COUNTS.
If there is anyone who really is here to discuss sports (and I suspect that
there are not many) tell them to go to BOOKS or RECORDS or somewhere. No
doubt the intricacies of pitching and the speed of those bicycles is being
debated there!
Hop this slops,
rick ellis
|
286.155 | | WMOIS::RIEU_D | Read his Lips...Know New Taxes!! | Mon Jul 23 1990 10:04 | 3 |
| King is certainly a lot more interesting than baseball, 'specially
the All-Star game!
Denny
|
286.156 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Mon Jul 23 1990 11:24 | 8 |
| Anyone who is seriously interested in sports would be well-advised to
add to his notebook the conference devoted to his team and/or sport.
I'm sure ASABET::BASEBALL has a *normal* type discussion of the All
Star Game.
Here, we take the road less traveled.....
A&W
|
286.157 | :-) | PFSVAX::JACOB | Bald Head=Solar panel 4 a Sex machine | Mon Jul 23 1990 11:52 | 9 |
| Well,IMO the All-Star game SURE DID SUCK so why can't we use this
useless remnant of the all-star note for something decent like Stephen
King discussions????????????????????????????????
I'm reading "The Dark Half" right now and it's not one of his best but
it's good, nevertheless.
JaKe
|
286.158 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Mon Jul 23 1990 12:04 | 14 |
| I believe it was Thoreau who wrote of marching to the beat of
a different drummer.
We surely do that in this conference.
SPORTS is the sum total of it's internal factors, and such external
factors which impinge upon it. Like a child who doesn't know how
to smile, Sports would be a sad place indeed if it were all
diatribes and dastisticks.
And remember how Frost finished that immortal poem about taking
the road less travelled....
It has made all the difference
|
286.159 | KP7 and all that... | WMOIS::RIEU_D | Read his Lips...Know New Taxes!! | Mon Jul 23 1990 12:25 | 3 |
| For all you King fans, he has his owm Conference: it's at
DNEAST::CASTLE_ROCK.
Denny
|
286.160 | Brian Shaw, Heading West with an Alligator | 7812::CARN | | Mon Jul 23 1990 14:08 | 25 |
| I've enjoyed:
Crazy Stuff
1. Thomas Mcguane
Sporting Club
Bushwacked Piano
92 In The Shade
Sci-fi
1. **** Effinger
What Entropy Means To Me
All his books
2. Jose Farmer
Riverworld Series
Dayworld (Great Concept)
Novels
1. Thomas Pynchon
V.
Gravities Rainbow
W.A.S.T.E. (or was it T.R.A.S.H)
2. Hunter S. Thompson
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
|
286.161 | | REFINE::ASHE | I thought it was a BoNO's commercial... | Wed Jul 25 1990 10:02 | 12 |
| > <<< Note 286.143 by FRSBEE::BROOKS "Drexler,ZinaGarrison,DrM" >>>
Let's see...
Drexler, surprised some people, didn't do anything in NCAA finals,
surprised some people and didn't do anything in the NBA finals...
Zina, surprised some people at Wimbledon, didn't do anything in the
finals...
Next? Do we need to comment on this?
ha ha..
|
286.162 | | FRSBEE::BROOKS | I could drop Tyson like a bad habit! | Wed Jul 25 1990 16:24 | 9 |
| Kinda hard up, aren't we Walt ?
For those of your that were wondering about that p-name :
C. Drexler - Sterling H.S. 1977-79
G. Brooks - Guess where ? - 1979
Z. Garrison - "" "" 1980-82
It's been a good year for Houston kids .... :-)
|
286.163 | Then why not Clyde, Doc, Zina...? | REFINE::ASHE | I thought it was a BoNO's commercial... | Wed Jul 25 1990 19:01 | 1 |
| You set yourself up pal, not me...
|
286.164 | Mondale,Schneider, Dukakis,Ashe .... :-) | FRSBEE::BROOKS | I could drop Tyson like a bad habit! | Fri Jul 27 1990 19:13 | 4 |
| Dream on .....
|
286.165 | | PARVAX::WARDLE | have YOU been set hidden today | Mon Jul 30 1990 07:54 | 6 |
| >> -< Mondale,Schneider, Dukakis,Ashe .... :-) >-
Doc, you forgot to throw Florio in that string...NJ Governer. Applauded
by Dukakis and Cuomo for his "plan".
JoJ
|
286.166 | | REFINE::ASHE | WouldUwalkONyourLIPSthruBUSTEDglass? | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:36 | 5 |
| Yeah, sure, we can add it..
>> -< Mondale,Schneider, Dukakis,Florio, K-k-kenny, .... :-) >-
|
286.167 | NJ's time to face the music | SHALOT::HUNT | Wyld Stallyns Rules | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:40 | 3 |
| Jim Florio is just cleaning up Elmer Fudd's eight-year mess.
Bob Hunt
|
286.168 | | REFINE::ASHE | Ziggy piggy, ZIGGY piggy, ZIGGY PIGGY | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:43 | 1 |
| Maybe Brooke will help bail them out, wasn't she an Elmer favorite?
|
286.169 | Florio is a loser that won. | PARVAX::WARDLE | have YOU been set hidden today | Mon Jul 30 1990 12:07 | 15 |
| >>Jim Florio is just cleaning up Elmer Fudd's eight-year mess.
Yeah, right. He whines about the deficit. He raises the sales tax,
makes some previously exempt items taxable, reduces state funding to
many of the school districts which naturally increases property taxes,
cuts the homeowner's rebate in half, and...at the same time, he and the
other geeks in the State Legislature vote themselves a $10,000 salary
increase!!!!
Plus, none of the above even addresses the hiring of unqualified family
members to fill high paying positions in the state government.
He's a slime, a slug, a crook, and a weasle.
JoJ
|
286.170 | More ... | SHALOT::HUNT | Wyld Stallyns Rules | Mon Jul 30 1990 12:34 | 40 |
| � Yeah, right. He whines about the deficit. He raises the sales tax,
� makes some previously exempt items taxable, reduces state funding to
� many of the school districts which naturally increases property taxes,
� cuts the homeowner's rebate in half, and...at the same time, he and the
� other geeks in the State Legislature vote themselves a $10,000 salary
� increase!!!!
Hey, I'm not defending Florio. At least not very vigorously. It just
seemed awfully strange to watch Tom Kean (aka Elmer Fudd) rack up a
string of healthy budget surpluses year in and and year out until the
realization dawned on him that his eight-year Garden State joy ride was
just about used up. And then he let the money roll. Right on into
deficit heaven and Florio's inauguration ...
� He's a slime, a slug, a crook, and a weasle.
Aren't they all ??? Hey, count your blessings. We've got to put up
with Jesse Helms down here in the Carolinas. That slime has made a
political fortune for himself by slick use of mass mailings to spread
fear and hate and collect donations.
And the day that Nelson Mandela landed at JFK airport, George Bush is
in Charlotte at a Helms fund-raiser telling the sheep that we need more
senators like Jesse. Gag me with a pitchfork.
I hear ya, JimWa. I just give Florio an teensy-weensy ounce of
recognition for making the state wake up and smell the coffee burning.
So his implementation sips. No big surprise.
I'm telling ya, Walter Mondale is starting to look like a genius. And
Jimmy Carter is looking positively sanctified. Carter left office
with a total deficit of around $50 billion and we were still the
world's largest creditor nation. Now we owe $3 trillion and it's just
a matter of time before the foreign creditors come looking for a few
seats in Congress so they can get a "hands on" look at their
investments.
Sigh ...
Bob Hunt
|
286.171 | How does Tuesday the 14th look, Nancy? | BUILD::MORGAN | | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:05 | 8 |
| Speaking of the Garden State, thus the Meadowlands, 15 years ago today
Jimmy Hoffa dissapeared from a Detroit suburb.
And while we're on a tangent, I've been saying for five years, history
will show that Jimmy Carter was a better president than the astrologer's
friend, Reagan.
Steve
|
286.172 | | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:18 | 6 |
|
Take it to mail or the Jersey conference.
mc
|
286.173 | | PARVAX::WARDLE | have YOU been set hidden today | Mon Jul 30 1990 13:39 | 12 |
| re: Bob Hunt
Lemme tell ya, some of the crap Florio pulled is just plain
unbelievable.
His "education plan" is among the worst pieces of legislation I've ever
seen.
Abe Lincoln was wrong, you CAN fool all of the people all of the time.
Especially the democrats.
JoJ
|
286.174 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | RubItUp/FlipIt/SlapItDown/OhNoooo! | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:07 | 12 |
| re .171
Amen Steve. It's interesting that ole Ronnie used to hang up a Calvin
Coolridge picture in the Oval Office.
Coolridge of course, led the U.S. during the Roaring 20's. Under his
leadership, the economy became a time bomb that went off in the lap of
his Republican successor Herbert Hoover.
Why do I think history will repeat itself ?
Doc
|
286.175 | | EARRTH::BROOKS | RubItUp/FlipIt/SlapItDown/OhNoooo! | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:15 | 42 |
|
re .170
� He's a slime, a slug, a crook, and a weasle.
> Aren't they all ??? Hey, count your blessings. We've got to put up
> with Jesse Helms down here in the Carolinas. That slime has made a
> political fortune for himself by slick use of mass mailings to spread
> fear and hate and collect donations.
> And the day that Nelson Mandela landed at JFK airport, George Bush is
> in Charlotte at a Helms fund-raiser telling the sheep that we need more
> senators like Jesse.
The words that I'd use to describe Helms would get the note set-hidden.
Suffice to say that I might throw a party the day Helms bites the big
one. And if there is a just God, and if there really is a Hell, I hope
that there is a special suite reserved for him and Strom Thurmond.
BTW, what is the election looking like ? I understand that a young
brother is running against him in the fall ....
> I'm telling ya, Walter Mondale is starting to look like a genius. And
> Jimmy Carter is looking positively sanctified.
Mondale loses 49 states for saying that we need taxes. Bush raises them
(after lying all through the election), and gets praise for his
"political courage".
Go figure (I have).
> Carter left office with a total deficit of around $50 billion and we
> were still the world's largest creditor nation. Now we owe $3 trillion
> and it's just a matter of time before the foreign creditors come looking
> for a few seats in Congress so they can get a "hands on" look at their
> investments.
Don't sweat it Bob, they probably invested in a few S and L's ....
Hell, Rockerfeller Center is just the beginning .....
Dr Midnight
|
286.176 | Any Tea Boats coming into Boston Harbor ? :-) | EARRTH::BROOKS | RubItUp/FlipIt/SlapItDown/OhNoooo! | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:16 | 6 |
| re JoJ
Wardle, stop complain' about Da Tax.
My gas just jumped 6 cents a gallon as of 12:01 am Saturday....
courtesy of a new Mass Gas Tax .....
|
286.177 | Helms vs Gantt | SHALOT::HUNT | Wyld Stallyns Rules | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:45 | 27 |
| Jesse Helms is running against Harvey Gantt, former mayor of Charlotte,
for United States Senator. And, yes, Gantt is black. He needs a lot
of support. Helms has done his usual thing, that is, he's pumped out
millions and millions of mass mail pieces spreading all kinds of
hysteria about liberals, homosexuals, AIDS victims, blacks, Jews, and
so on. And, of course, he asks for token donations. He's collected a
huge war chest from around the country, not just North Carolina. He'll
bury Gantt if it comes down to a spending battle. Gantt needs the
other black leaders to support him. He needs Dinkins, Jackson, Wilder,
and Andy Young to back him up. Leave Marion Barry and Wilson Goode at
home.
If there is a God, Helms will lose. He is the epitome of the old
racist South and, all too often, comes frighteningly close to taking
this country back to the Joe McCarthy era. Witness this flap with the
NEA funding and the Mapplethorpe exhibits.
And I do not understand what James Meredith is doing involved with
Helms. Meredith, the first black to enroll at the University of
Mississippi, was one of the great symbols of the 1960s civil rights
movement. Now he's one of Helms' hate-and-fear mongers.
Ouch ...
Sorry for the non-SPORTS diversion ...
Bob Hunt
|
286.178 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | A Zorro snap in the Z formation! | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:46 | 9 |
| Hey joJ,
How come you aren't all over your hero, George Bush, like you are
Florio? Ol' George sure is making a mess of things ain't he.
Oh, I get it, you're one of the folks who *believed* him when he
said *No New Taxes* Some folks sure are gullible. That line
had me rollward when he first said it.
JD
|
286.179 | | PARVAX::WARDLE | have YOU been set hidden today | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:55 | 11 |
| Well JD, let's just say that Florio not only raised taxes, hired his
family and friends, voted for a raise in pay for himself and his
cronies, but on top of that, ignored entirely the group of economists
at Rutgers and Princeton that were put in place by the previous
Democratic governer to examine the budget and what effects the proposed
tax changes would do not only for the budget, but for the state
economy.
Bottom line, he pulled a sleeze deal on all of us.
JoJ
|
286.180 | and Jesse would have been the best choice | CNTROL::CHILDS | and so castles made of sand... | Mon Jul 30 1990 16:08 | 31 |
| <<< Note 286.179 by PARVAX::WARDLE "have YOU been set hidden today" >>>
Well JD, let's just say that Florio not only raised taxes, hired his
family and friends, voted for a raise in pay for himself and his
cronies, but on top of that, ignored entirely the group of economists
at Rutgers and Princeton that were put in place by the previous
Democratic governer to examine the budget and what effects the proposed
tax changes would do not only for the budget, but for the state
economy.
>>> Bottom line, he pulled a sleeze deal on all of us.
JoJ
and so isn't George every single day. Educational president? What has he
done for education? Enviromental president? What has he done for the envir-
oment? On every key issue at home he's dropped the burden back on the states
to make the decision. His one big claim to fame is going after Noregia in
Panama to protect his own butt. When's the last time anyone heard anything
about ole Manuel? And to boot he did at christmas time and ruined a few
people's holidays and of course lifes with the men and women we lost.
AND MOST IMPORTANTLY WHAT ABOUT THE HOMELESS????
not a thing but hey let's have these million dollar summits with Gorby
and see how many bombs to build this year....
The Dukester is a real joke but he'd have been better than this bum...
mike
|
286.181 | And I get yelled at for talkin' hoops in a hoops topic :^( | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Mon Jul 30 1990 16:18 | 4 |
| Interesting SPORTS discussion here, eh?
- ACC Chris
|
286.182 | And the "family" President ??? | SHALOT::HUNT | Wyld Stallyns Rules | Mon Jul 30 1990 16:42 | 20 |
| Not to mention that other drivel from his campaign about "kinder and gentler"
and "a thousand points of light" ...
This same kinder and gentler windbag vetoed the bill that would have mandated
some semi-decent family leave policies in case of childbirth, family illness,
or other hardship. Said he thought it was a good idea but the employers ought
to do it on their own.
Yeah, right. They've shown tremendous progress on that front, haven't they,
George ??? They've all just bellied right on up to the bar and joined the
rest of the world in guaranteeing basic family securities.
What a slime. I hope his S&L sleaze-kid gets his boots fried. At this point,
I think Barbara Bush ought to run the country. She's at least got a decent
heart and half a brain.
Bob Hunt
P.S. And let's not forget that we have to pray every night that Bush lives.
Talk about the lesser of two evils. Double ouch ...
|
286.183 | I know it ain't music or books, but it ain't sports either | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:25 | 1 |
|
|
286.184 | On average, gas is still $.03 > in NH than in MA....... | SASE::SZABO | Got nothing but hell to pay. | Tue Jul 31 1990 08:32 | 19 |
| Very sorry Mac, but I've got to add 1 thing here, since I missed-out
yesterday........ :-)
re: $.06/ gallon gas tax increase in MA
I was extremely surprised, and tickled rollward, when I read in my
Sunday paper that, even with this increase, gas is still cheaper in MA
than in "Live Free or Die" NH, the land where the disgusted MA
residents defect when times get a little tough. Living in a border
town, I decided to take a little ride and see for myself. Sure enough,
the typical Mobil Mart self-serves were still higher (by only a penny)
than the MA ones. The cheap no name stations pulled a sleazy though,
by *lowering* their prices *after* MA gas stations had to raise theirs,
knowing that many angry MA residents would waste a bucks worth of gas
to save a dime and spite the Duke...... HAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
Again, sorry, back to the All Star Game talk..... :-)
Hawk
|
286.185 | HTH | SALEM::DODA | Capone,Floyd,MassPoliticians | Tue Jul 31 1990 08:43 | 0 |
286.186 | | ASABET::CORBETT | Mike Corbett - 223-9889 | Tue Jul 31 1990 09:23 | 14 |
|
You guys are incredible, a moderator has asked that the discussion
moved to an apropriate notes file but nobody listens.
Other times things a deleted by a moderator only to be put back
later.
Use notes the way they were intended!! Not as 'your' place to go and
talk about what ever you want and disreagrd the rules, policies, and guidlines
already in place and working in most other notes conferences.
mc
|
286.187 | | CAM::WAY | Heave to, and prepare to be boarded! | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:53 | 27 |
| I'm probably the worst offender in here when it comes to junk noting,
but I'll stand by the moderators on this one.
See, a lot of people view the moderator as big brother or something.
In a sense, that's true, in that a moderator has a lot of power that
can be misused.
However, the responsibilities of the moderator(s) are commensurate
with the power they possess. If someone has a mondo gripe and goes
to personnel, and personnel looks at the conference and finds it
lacking, then the moderator is ultimately responsible.
(View personnel as Fay Vincent...that might give a proper viewpoint)
So, while we do a lot of junk noting in here, the mods are really
not all that bad. While some of their views may not be consistent
with my own, and while they committee of moderators may have varying
opinions, they are still the moderators, and there word has to be
followed.
Moderating is not an easy job. Especially in this conference.
They give us a lot of latitude in reality, more than any other
conference I've seen...
Finally, look at it this way: no moderators, no conference.
JMHO,
'saw
|
286.188 | Maybe James is getting some inside dirt ??? | FRSBEE::BROOKS | RubItUp/FlipIt/SlapItDown/OhNoooo! | Thu Aug 02 1990 19:25 | 8 |
| re .177
Bob, Meridith has been shot, and he's also been beating by a redneck
sherriff or two.
I hope maybe one bump on the head too many can explain his behavior.
Otherwise .....
|
286.189 | | FRSBEE::BROOKS | RubItUp/FlipIt/SlapItDown/OhNoooo! | Thu Aug 02 1990 19:28 | 5 |
| re .186
Tex, let's face it. The All-Star game was booooooring. It stunk !!
Taling politics is much more stimulating for the mind ....
|
286.190 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Aug 03 1990 09:24 | 1 |
| Maybe so, Doc, but it doesn't belong in here.
|
286.191 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Aug 03 1990 11:45 | 2 |
| This note has been writelocked. If anyone really wants to discuss the
1990 All Star game, send me mail and I'll unlock it.
|